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Bandro (Hapalemur alaotrensis) (Photo credit: Tobia Nowlan)
Bandro (Hapalemur alaotrensis) (Photo credit: Tobia Nowlan)
Bandro (Hapalemur alaotrensis) (Photo credit: Alice Smith)
Silky Sifaka Lemur (Propithecus candidus), one of the most endangered primate of the world. Marojejy National Park, Sambava, Madagascar. (Photo credit: Iñaki Relanzon courtesy of FAPBM)
Key biodiversity on the Bangweulu swamps; Black Lechwe and waterfowl (Photo Credit: Mwansa Chisanga)
Prickly pear cactus, Oputina stricta, is invasive in Ethiopia, where it outcompetes native plants and prevents grazing on or near it (Photo Credit: CABI).
While most geckos are noctural, some like this Namib day gecko can be found out on rocks during the day. (Photo Credit: L. Ceríaco)
While important discoveries remain to be made in the field, early 20th century museum collections remain an important untapped resource for studying the distribution and diversity of Angolan and Namibian amphibians and reptiles. (Photo Credit: L. Ceríaco)
A student sampling aquatic invertebrates in a fynbos stream (Photo Credit: Jeremy Shelton)
A pristine headwater stream flowing through the fynbos (Photo Credit: Jeremy Shelton)
FRC researchers contemplate sampling a deep pool on a fynbos river (Photo Credit: Jeremy Shelton)